I hate this dude I really do but he has traumatic brain injury. Making fun of his handwriting because of that is the lowest hanging fruit. He has legitimately awful politics you can go after without being ableist. |
Stop it. Writing in cursive has nothing to do with being a surgeon. The surgeons I know worked on their manual dexterity by playing instruments and decorating cakes. |
If only he’d had a handwriting book… |
Lololol. We have 3 surgeons in our family. None of them decorate cakes. Cute idea, though. |
My sister-in-law is brilliant, and she does. Some people are good at everything!! |
I have lovely handwriting and enjoyed learning cursive in 3rd grade. So I taught my kids how to write and they think it’s fun. Will they have as nice handwriting as I did? I don’t really care. Do I need them to learn this in school? Heck no. I would much rather they work on critical thinking skills and other subjects. Also not sure why OP even brings up CRT… they’re entirely different subjects. |
Mine too. Also, I didn't read the entire thread but cursive helps with spelling, vowel sound combinations for example. But what's CRT? Cognitive Retail Therapy? |
Never mind. I know what CRT is. Im so slow sometimes. |
In VA, cursive is supposed to be taught in the second or third grade. Ask your child's teacher about it. |
This. I agree with this. Cursive is another means of learning. Study after study shows our brains are wired to learn by reading and writing. Printing is tough for kids to do with any sort of speed. And typing into a keyboard for notes actually bypasses the brain. So it is not part of the learning process (it is literally wasted time) - where if note taking with cursive a vast majority of kids would be learning as they were writing then they review. They get the auditory from listening, the tactile and visual from writing, then they review the material. The same that studies show kids learn better with textbooks than computer screens. IT is very important but understanding that our brains are wired a certain way is key to education. |
Fairfax County. They also do not teach grammar or spelling. |
This is not true. My kids learned cursive in 2nd grade in FCPS. |
Much better to teach shorthand. |
I think kids should at least learn how to read cursive and also be able to sign their name in cursive. Other than that, optional. |
I teach history. Any old letters/documents that kids (actual school children) read have been transcribed. What you describe from Reddit is nothing new. I used to work for my state’s historical society and did that for a living. I dealt with many newly donated letters and other handwritten documents from prominent individuals and local families. Despite learning cursive in Catholic school, there were letters that I really struggled to decipher because there’s always variations and idiosyncrasies in an individual’s handwriting. Sometimes you guess a word based on context and a bit of research. |